TY - JOUR
T1 - Extrinsic information transfer functions
T2 - Model and erasure channel properties
AU - Ashikhmin, Alexei
AU - Kramer, Gerhard
AU - ten Brink, Stephan
PY - 2004/11
Y1 - 2004/11
N2 - Extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) charts are a tool for predicting the convergence behavior of iterative processors for a variety of communication problems. A model is introdueed that applies to decoding problems, including the iterative decoding of parallel concatenated (turbo) codes, serially concatenated codes, low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes, and repeat-accumulate (RA) codes. EXIT functions are defined using the model, and several properties of such functions are proved for erasure channels. One property expresses the area under an EXIT function in terms of a conditional entropy. A useful consequence of this result is that the design of capacity-approaching codes reduces to a curve-fitting problem for all the aforementioned codes. A second property relates the EXIT function of a code to its Helleseth-Kløve-Levenshtein information functions, and thereby to the support weights of its subcodes. The relation is via a refinement of information functions called split information functions, and via a refinement of support weights called split support weights. Split information functions are used to prove a third property that relates the EXIT function of a linear code to the EXIT funcfion of its dual.
AB - Extrinsic information transfer (EXIT) charts are a tool for predicting the convergence behavior of iterative processors for a variety of communication problems. A model is introdueed that applies to decoding problems, including the iterative decoding of parallel concatenated (turbo) codes, serially concatenated codes, low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes, and repeat-accumulate (RA) codes. EXIT functions are defined using the model, and several properties of such functions are proved for erasure channels. One property expresses the area under an EXIT function in terms of a conditional entropy. A useful consequence of this result is that the design of capacity-approaching codes reduces to a curve-fitting problem for all the aforementioned codes. A second property relates the EXIT function of a code to its Helleseth-Kløve-Levenshtein information functions, and thereby to the support weights of its subcodes. The relation is via a refinement of information functions called split information functions, and via a refinement of support weights called split support weights. Split information functions are used to prove a third property that relates the EXIT function of a linear code to the EXIT funcfion of its dual.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=2442425417&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TIT.2004.836693
DO - 10.1109/TIT.2004.836693
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:2442425417
SN - 0018-9448
VL - 50
SP - 2657
EP - 2673
JO - IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
JF - IEEE Transactions on Information Theory
IS - 11
ER -